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28 August 2006
I have been in the shareware business for about 3 years. In fact, this is how I got into making money with websites, seo, marketing etc. During these years I have learned a thing or two about promoting shareware. This article is about getting traffic to your shareware site and converting it into sales. Here are my tips.Submit to Software Directories The first thing you need to do is getting your shareware into all software directories. Depending on the type/category of software, you may get little or loads of traffic from software directories. As a start, submit your shareware into www.download.com and www.tucows.com These two are the major software directories that can bring you the most traffic. Pay for the listing, it is well worth it. If you have a webmaster related software, submit it to www.snapfiles.com (provides good amount of traffic) The Association of Shareware Professionals has developed a nice little file format used to describe software called PAD. This file format is used by hundreds of software directories. In addition, the The Association of Shareware Professionals operates a data repository where you can submit the PAD files of your shareware and it would be automatically picked by hundreds of download sites. Download PADGen. It is a free utility to generate your PAD files with full info about your software. Upload the PAD file onto your website. Submit the PAD file URL into the PAD Repository. Next, go to Google and search for “submit pad” “add pad” and related keyphrases and submit the PAD file to all the software directories you can find. The above two steps will bring you enough traffic to kick-start the sales of your program. Whenever you update your software, update the PAD file and upload it onto your site. Download sites routinely crawl your PAD files and update your software information accordingly. Make your Site Sell Don’t listen to all the copywriting “gurus” out there and don’t put a one-page long sales letter mini site. And for God’s sake, don’t put “Dear Friend” on top of it. This sucks. Your site should look like a software company’s website. I have found that for a shareware website, honest, short, no-hype bulleted mix of features and benefits works best. Put a title with your software and some keywords. Next come the features and benefits bullets. Put a download link on the first visible screen of your web page. This is a must. There is a high percentage of visitors, who won’t read your web page any way. They are looking for the download link. Give it to them. The more people download your shareware, the more sales you’ll get. Put a download link between every few paragraphs. My general guideline for the layout of the sales page: (top to bottom): Logo + navigation (the height of this block should be kept to a minimum) Title (program name + some keywords) Bullets – start them with a verb and describe what your prospects can do with your software. Keep the bullets short – highlight some benefits etc. Don’t “dear friend” your users and don’t warm them up – just go straight to the software features/benefits. A Download Link. Next, tell them about your money back guarantee (anything less than 30 days is a joke, go for something like 90, 120 days or a full year). Write about your upgrade pricing policy. Next put testimonials. The format I favor is a testimonial, a download link, a testimonial, a download link, a testimonial… There it is. It is really important to start your web page with short easy to read bullets and offer a big visible Download Link on the first screen. Don’t put a huge picture/logo at the top of the first screen. It is important to not waste space at the top of the screen with too much graphics and navigation. Another useful tip is: don’t use too big fonts for your title. For some reason, smaller fonts get read more and annoy less. My copywriting advice may seem unorthodox, but it works much better. In fact, my shortest pages usually have the highest percentage of downloads per visitor. You may have better results with a classic mini-website long sales letter page, if your product is niche and relates to customers who aren’t too computer savvy. SEO Tips Use your most important keywords in the title (that’s obvious). Don’t overrepeat keywords through the text. On the contrary, use different / unique words and write naturally. Write for the visitor. Put as many testimonials as possible. Your customers use surprisingly different words than you, which can draw additional traffic. If applicable, write a few long articles that may be related to your software. These should follow the general rules of covert sales letters. The articles should describe a problem, its possible solutions and how your software can really be a solution to that problem. These additional articles can pull additional traffic for more sales. Advertise Try mastering Google AdWords. It is well worth the time and effort. Even if you manage top search engine positions, you can still drive a lot of additional traffic from other keywords and Google’s content network. You also get the chance to test the conversion rates of different keywords before emphasizing them on your SEO campaign. I have also found that bidding on keywords you already have the top SERP spots can bring additional high-converting traffic and sales. Many software download sites offer different advertising options. Here it is a hit or miss. If you have the budget try and see which ones will work for you. The best I have found working for me are download.com’s Pay-Per-Download program and a review at http://www.freedownloadscenter.com/ More Random Tips
16 August 2006
The rebranded Google Webmaster Central (formerly Google Sitemaps) is set to finally resolve Google’s canonical issues. For some time Google has had problems with the www.domain.com/.. and domain.com/.. versions of site URLs (detecting if they are one and the same site, distributing linking popularity properly). Many websites have incoming links pointing to both the www.domain.com and domain.com URL versions. The problem was exacerbated when the internal linking structure uses relative URLs (links like /article.htm opposed to links like www.domain.com/article.htm).Recently Google added a new feature in their Webmaster Tools section (former Google Sitemaps), where every webmaster could set a preference for www. or non-www. URLs on every validated domain. Instead of guessing, you simply tell Google to use the www. or non-www. URL versions for every site of yours. This helps properly aggregating PageRank and showing the proper URLs within the SERPs. In addition, Google offers a variety of other goodies like giving you crawling stats, problems, penalization info, reinclusion requests for penalized sites etc. I’ve been using these features for some time and they are getting better and better and are a must for every webmaster. It is interesting to know what kind of stats does Google keep for every site in its index. Judging from their Webmaster Tools section, Google keeps ranking information (for which keywords does your site rank and at what positions). As I have written numerous times, ranking for as many keywords as possible (even non-competitive) gives you a ranking boost for more competitive ones (content is king). Another great stat that Google shows is the most common words used within content on your sites and in the anchor text of links pointing to your site. I have noticed that Google has associated the anchor text keywords of some of my sites with words that do NOT appear in the anchor text, but words close to the links. So, yes, Google looks at text around links and probably uses it for scoring purposes. The keywords associated with your content and links do not appear for all sites. I’ve noticed that when I added my sites using the www.domain.com version as the URL name of the site, I didn’t get these stats. When I set a domain preference for the www.domain.com versions, Google added the domain.com versions to the list of my sites and now shows these keyword associations when I click on the non-www. versions. I think that’s a glitch, but anyway, Google shows these vital stats when you have your sites added as non-www. domains. I highly recommend the Google’s Webmaster Central Tools to all webmasters, especially the domain preference feature.
13 July 2006
Just a quick note that I have coded avatars and signatures into the forums (my seo-board forum script). Now you can put an avatar picture and place your sites in your signature. Another new feature is that all links on the forums are now without the nofollow tag. Now you can get link credit for your posts. I guess having your links in the forums is a nice opportunity, since the SEO Guide has decent link popularity.
17 June 2006
Let me ask you a few questions. What is your keyword targeting strategy? Do you go for the more general and competitive terms or for the more specific, longer and less competitive ones? Do you prefer shorter or longer articles? Are you targeting Google or Yahoo and MSN?Before I lay down my general keyword strategy, let me explain what is the “keyword ladder” and then I will elaborate on why I believe in climbing it (a bottom-up approach). Imagine a ladder where you put the most general and competitive keyphrases on the top rung and the least competitive keyphrases on the bottom rung. As an example, let us consider the SEO industry. On the top rung we would have general queries like: “search engine optimization”, “search engine marketing”, “seo” etc. Somewhere below we will have less competitive and more specific keyphrases like: “google search engine optimization”, “yahoo search engine optimization”, “search engine optimization services” etc. Going down the ladder we might come down to queries of the type: “affordable seo specialist in New York”, “where can I learn seo for free” etc. What are the general characteristics of the ladder? The top keyphrases are the most competitive, they have the highest traffic potential per keyphrase, they are fewer in numbers and they convert worst (there are too general). Going down the ladder we come to keyphrases that are less competitive, easier to rank for, have lower search volume, but are higher in numbers and usually convert much better (because they are very specific). The problem with very specific long queries is that it is hard to keyword research them. Depending on who you ask, about 20% to 50% of all daily queries are unique never-searched-before ones. Add to these the loads of queries from the bottom of the ladder that are searched for once in a while and we come to the fact that most of the queries from the bottom of the ladder don’t show in keyword research tools. That of course, can’t stop us from targeting them. I try to target the bottom half of the ladder for at least these reasons: 1. It is easier to rank higher for less competitive keyphrases 2. The traffic you can get from thousands of lower profile keyphrases is more diverse and stable since you don’t put your eggs in too few baskets (keywords) 3. The bottom half of the ladder can provide more total traffic, since the number of low profile keyphrases is higher (it is like getting 100 visitors from one general keyphrase vs getting 10 visitors from each of 10 less competitive queries) 4. Searchers are starting to use longer and more descriptive queries, which bumps up the traffic potential of the bottom half of the keyword ladder 5. The bottom half of the ladder converts better (more revenue for you) 6. Targeting many low competitive keywords at the same time is not that difficult on Google. If you still haven’t noticed, Google has introduced ranking scores which push up the overall rankings of pages and sites that rank well for a variety of keyphrases. In other words, when you have a lot of content, you rank well for a variety of less competitive queries, which pushes up your rankings on the more competitive queries from the top half of the ladder, which in turn pushes the rankings of the even more competitive ones etc. Or to restate it in other words, with Google it is much easier to rank for the general high search volume queries (top half of the ladder), when you have already conquered the bottom half of the ladder. That is what I call ‘climbing’ the keyword ladder. All you have to do is have loads of content. Let me get back to the last point above: you must climb the keyword ladder by starting from less competitive queries and gradually increasing your rankings for more and more competitive keywords. Here’s a snippet from Google’s patent “Information Retrieval Based On Historical Data”: “Thus, the quantity or rate that a document moves in rankings over a period of time might be used to influence future scores assigned to that document. In one implementation, for each set of search results, a document may be weighted according to its position in the top N search results.” Every time you rank a page in the top N results, you may get a little general ranking boost (for other queries). The more times you can rank pages in the top N search results, the greater ranking boost you get. You can rank a great number of keyphrases in the top N when you have a lot of content and when these keyphrases are from the less competitive bottom-half of the ladder. Google keeps statistics of which queries you rank for and which are selected by users within the SERPs. You can see the top stats, if you use Google Sitemaps. The above “content is king” ranking factors are very different from how Yahoo and MSN operate. Let me give you a real world example. You are writing an article that discusses how to optimize AdWords campaigns. You wrote a very comprehensive and long article that covers the ins and outs of AdWords. Now you are coming to the point where you need to optimize the article for search engine traffic. You do some keyword research and it turns out there are let’s say 20 good keyphrases to target. How do you target all of these? Since Yahoo and MSN (and also Google not so long time ago) rely mostly on the anchor text of incoming links, link popularity and page titles, you need incoming links with the anchor text targeting these 20 keyphrases. You also need to place as many of these keywords in the page title. That seems like an impossible task. Some webmasters may try to partition the content into multiple pages trying to target each of these 20 keyphrases. But how do you get links to all these parts of the article. There will always be someone to outrank that approach by targeting a single page with a specific keyword from these 20. What most webmasters do at this time, is they just pick one or two of these 20 keywords to target. That is not bad but it is unnatural. It is like webmasters who offers generally the same AdWords content, share the traffic between them by everyone emphasizing a certain keyphrase. Google is clearly trying to stop this traffic partitioning. Google will try to infer which is the best AdWords page and will try to send as much relevant traffic (including these 20 keywords) to the top few authorative pages. How will Google do that? By boosting the rankings of the sites that have real content (having rankings for the bottom-half of the ladder). Not so long ago, I was into the “links are king” camp. Now I am at an equal distance between the “content is king” vs. “links are king” camps (maybe closer to the “content is king” camp, when I think long-term). I don’t want to be misinterpreted here. Sites with almost no content can outrank sites with a lot of great content. Fact is, everything else being equal, a site with no content (haven’t conquered the bottom half of the keyword ladder) will need more and higher quality links to outrank a site with great content. To reframe it another way: having a lot of content decreases the amount and quality of links you need. Naturally, you should be able to get higher quality links long term with a great content site. Your competitors will need to buy many links in order to compensate for their low-quality websites. And sites with no content will have a hard time overpowering your bottom-of-the-ladder traffic. They can only steal your general keyphrases traffic. Let me take out my crystal ball and see into the future of search engines…Hmm, I see Yahoo and MSN copying Google… I see Yahoo and MSN becoming more Google-like… Got the point? Sooner or later, Yahoo and MSN will find a way to give ranking boosts to genuine sites with loads of content and little over-optimization. We will start to see Google doing this better and better. In a way, it supports the notion of “the rich becoming richer” – or having the SERPs dominated by a handful of the most authorative websites. Now let my lay out my keyword targeting strategy Write Long Pages When you write longer pages, you use more unique and repeated words per page. The repeated words increase the rankings of the queries they participate in. The unique words open the possibility of ranking for more keyphrases. Any way you look at it, the more words on a page, the more keyword phrases you target. It is that simple. When your pages are longer, you are basically going for more keywords from the bottom of the ladder. You get these and Google boosts your rankings for the more competitive ones. Longer pages will always outperform shorter ones. Write naturally Don’t overrepeat one or two phrases. Write naturally. Good content is written naturally. While search engines cannot understand the quality of content by way of interpreting its meaning, they can detect and devalue unnatural overrepeated and stuffed content. When you write naturally, you usually use synonyms, related words and that ups the number of potential phrases you target. But wouldn’t that dilute your keyword density? Forget the nonsense of keyword density. Keyword density has never-ever been used by Google or any other decent search engine (because it does not improve relevancy). That is one of the SEO myths trotted by the SEO “experts”. Optimize your page titles When you do keyword research, remember, that you cannot research the bottom of the keyword ladder. You research the top of the ladder – the competitive high-traffic, most common search terms. Place the most general ones in the title of your home page and the titles of the major sections. Your content can target one or two general keyphrases in the page titles. Research and use the common keyword subphrases Have you noticed that if you make a long list of queries related to your pages, you start to see common subphrases. Let’s say you sell a weight loss ebook. You can target keyphrases like: weight loss book, weight loss ebook, weight loss program… but you can also target keyphrases like: diet book, diet ebook, diet program … Here we see that a lot of keyphrases that are common to queries relevant to your page include subphrases like “weight loss”, “diet”, “diets”, “dieting”, “calories” etc. It makes sense to think that most of the queries from the keyword ladder (top + bottom parts) will include the above subphrases as parts of the queries. These common subphrases are usually some of the more general queries (top of the keyword ladder). When you have identified the common subphrases you need to do 4 things to greatly increase your chances of ranking for a lot of queries. 1. Use all these common subphrases generously in your long articles. Don’t focus on one subphrase. Use all of them + their stemmed variants. These are the ones that should be repeated more often. All the other text (non-common subphrases) should be written naturally. To use as many of them, you need to write longer articles. 2. When using the common subphrases within content, write them as parts of the longer queries. If you focus on “weight loss”, use it as “weight loss book”, next time as “weight loss program” or “weight loss failure” etc. 3. Place a few of these subphrases in the page title 4. If you have control over the anchor text of the incoming links (as with home pages), try to inject as many subphrases as possible. Anchor text is still very important. Let’s say that the subphrase “weight loss” is a subphrase in 8000 potential queries you may target on your page. You need to inject it into as many incoming links and then all the other words on the page will combine nicely with “weight loss” to form longer queries and increase your rankings for a great variety of phrases. If you submit to directories, rotate the anchor text subphrases. In our case rotate among “weight loss”, “diet”, “calories” etc. There are obviously a lot of other factors to consider. Pages are going up and down the ladder constantly. Have you noticed that after each update your traffic and rankings increase or decrease across most of your pages? In a way, all ranking factors together either made you climb the ladder (rank for more queries) or made you go down the ladder (rank for less queries). That is why I believe the most powerful factors for ranking on Google are domain based – they act upon all pages on the domain. One of these domain based factors is the “how many queries do you rank for in the top N results”. Google’s patent on “Information Retrieval Based On Historical Data” clearly states that a “document” may mean a page, a site, a part of a site (a subfolder).
12 June 2006
Do you sell something on the web solely through PayPal? If so, you are leaving money on the table.The problem with PayPal is that it does not support a lot of countries and customers from these unsupported countries will not be able to buy from you. As I am Bulgarian and Bulgaria is not a supported country, I am unable to submit my sites to paid directories, which take payments only through PayPal. They lose sales. If you sell on the web, don’t rely 100% on PayPal. You need to accept credit cards. I have seen numerous reports on webmaster forums that adding credit card support increases revenue compared to only accepting PayPal. I sell a software program and have sold copies in 52 countries with a lot of them unsupported by PayPal. If I relied on PayPal, I would have lost a nice amount of revenue. I really do hope Google’s GBuy would support all countries worldwide. PayPal is great, but is not enough to cover all customers.
06 June 2006
I have been meaning to redesign this SEO Guide site for a long-time. I have been traveling for the last 3 months and haven’t really been able to work on anything on my sites. After such long layoffs from work, I am always scratching my head and hesitating where to start work from.Well, I decided to warm-up with something more enjoyable – reskinning the SEO guide. My Google Analytics stats show than only about 9% to 12% of my visitors on all of my sites use smaller screen resolutions than 1024x768. To me, that signifies the death of 800x600 designs. 3-column fixed-width 1024x768 designs, make it a lot easier to produce a usable web site, with a nice navigation including lots of links and of course, there is bigger and less annoying ad space. I sat and made something quite simple. It was easy to skin the blog and the forum because they are running my own scripts. I guess there are still some spacing and color issues I will be fixing, but overall I like the simplicity of mostly text designs with very few colors. I would be releasing a brand-new web development blog and the next upgrade of my blog script would be a comments system, which I am not sure I will enable on this site. The next version of my SEO-Board is also under heavy development, with full-blown features including avatars, signatures, a great plug-in system, skin system etc. My plans for the forums at SEO Guide include upgrading the script to offer signatures, avatars and AdSense revenue sharing. That’s the news for now.
17 May 2006
Matt Cutts has been sharing a great deal of inside information on Google’s ranking algorithm on his blog and through an interview with Mike Grehan.You can read the full scoop on the Bigdaddy update at Matt’s blog here: http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/indexing-timeline/ The most interesting point from the post is that Google has changed the way they calculate crawling priority. They seem to factor how trusty are the incoming and outgoing links of a site when determining how much of it to crawl. Matt gives great examples. Basically, for a new site you need to have quality incoming and outgoing links. If you just swap reciprocals with low quality sites, you get both low quality incoming and outgoing links which is a no-no. Mike Grehan has done a great interview with Matt Cutts. You can read the gist of it here: http://www.clickz.com/experts/search/results/article.php/3605961. There are two links to the full audio interview at the bottom of the article. This is a must read / hear. Matt speaks about the importance of PageRank, reciprocal, triangular etc. links and the (non-)existence of the alleged Sandbox effect on new sites. Matt debunks the Sandbox theory that I haven’t been a fan of. He says: "I think a lot of what's perceived as the sandbox is artefacts where, in our indexing, some data may take longer to be computed than other data." The take home message from all this information is: stop using reciprocal links, triangular links or whatever easy link exchange scheme; don’t buy links (or don’t get caught buying links); link out to great sites; focus on user experience
11 April 2006
Google has just been granted a patent called "Adaptive computation of ranking", which deals with faster PageRank approximations.Another patent called "Methods for ranking nodes in large directed graphs" deals with another variant of PageRank that I wrote about some time ago (I called it HostRank, the article is no longer available). Both patents are follow-ups on papers by Taher Haveliwala (the author of the Topic Sensitive PageRank papers) who now works for Google. I wonder, if Google has filed for a patent on Topic Sensitive PageRanks. I think the second patent has better real world applications and matches perfectly with Google's distributed architecture.
10 April 2006
A brand new Microsoft research paper caught my attention recently. The paper reinforced my firm belief that one of the most important SEO factors in the future is going to be: usage statistics (Google’s terminology) or popularity (Microsoft’s terminology, not to be confused with link popularity).The paper “Beyond PageRank: Machine Learning for Static Ranking” deals with Microsoft’s RankNet technology and devising query-independent ranking factors. The RankNet relevancy technology works on training neural networks. Microsoft has developed a large dataset of common queries for which humans were used to order the top results. In the paper, the researchers tried to find which ranking factors could be used in order to produce ranking results as similar as possible to the ones done by real humans. The tested groups of ranking factors were: PageRank, Popularity, Anchor Text and inlinks, Page factors, Domain factors. Popularity The researchers tested the actual popularity of a web page (the number of times the page has been visited by a user over a period of time). This is not link popularity, but usage popularity. There are 3 basic sources of popularity data – Microsoft’s toolbar, proxy logs and click tracking within the SERPs. Anchor text and inlinks Information related to the anchor text of the page’s incoming links (total text, unique words etc). Page factors These were factors associated with the page and its URL. The researchers pointed out they used 8 simple features and named only 2 of them specifically – number of words in the body and the frequency of the most common word on-page. Domain factors Factors computed as averages across all pages in the domain (like average number of outlinks, average PageRank per page etc.) The researchers found that when PageRank was used alone against the other much simpler factors (Popularity, Page.. factors), PageRank was outscored. Basically, the other tested factors provided much better relevancy (compared with human ranking). Now comes the meaty part. The 2 most important factors that boosted the ranking relevancy mostly were: Page factors and Popularity. The researchers found that from the Page factors the URL was insignificant and the important factors were on-page text. Even though, the researchers had very limited Popularity data, they found that this data was a very significant relevancy booster (second to Page factors). They also found that the more Popularity data they gained, the better the relevancy boost. All of this reinforced my contention that one of the hottest new directions in search engine relevancy is usage statistics or user/usage popularity or in simple words – how may people visit a web site / page, how much time do visitors stay and how often they return to a website. The tricky part here is: how to obtain this popularity data? Toolbars, proxy logs, click tracking etc. Microsoft could have an edge in the future by having the most popular operating system and browser. Google has the toolbar, AdSense, AdWords, Analytics etc. The war on gathering usage data would be interesting as Google has at least 2 patents dealing with it. The old saying: make web pages for users, not for search engines should be the new webmaster mantra. The 10 commandments of building a quality website
09 March 2006
Here is a very important factor for your website success: “How much time does a user spend on your site per visit and how often does that user come back?”. The more, the better. When your visitors spend a lot of time on your sites, a bunch of cool things happen…1. Search engines will increase your rankings. One of the hottest new directions in search relevancy is tracking user behavior (time spent on sites, clicking on search results, bookmarks etc.). “Usage statistics” as Google calls it, is a substantial part of user behavior. The more time a user spends on your site, the better your site must be, right? When users go around reading all your content, it means your content is interesting, relevant and of high-quality. It also means your content is not just a bunch of stuffed keywords. Google, for example, talks about using user behavior and specifically usage statistics (traffic data) for ranking purposes in at least 2 patents – “Methods and apparatus for employing usage statistics in document retrieval” and “Information retrieval based on historical data”. 2. The more a user stays at your site, the better are your chances of making a good impression. That means more incoming links, more repeat visitors, more bookmarks etc. This in turn means more repeat traffic, more traffic from incoming links and more search engine traffic (better rankings). 3. The more pages a visitors sees, the more times your advertising gets shown (more ad impressions). More ad impressions will turn into more revenue. Some time ago, I thought the best thing for AdSense revenue was to make simple pages with very few links and put AdSense all over. These made-for-AdSense kinds of pages get a higher CPC per visit BUT… If the visitor is directed to read more of your content, you will get more ad impressions per visit, more repeat visitors, more search engine traffic, links etc. In the long-run, making a valuable, usable and easy to navigate content site will make you much more money than trying to monetize users on the very first visit by overloading with AdSense and providing no usable navigation. How do you make your visitor stay at your site longer? 1. Make your site load fast! In a recent thread on WebMasterWorld, there was a very interesting discussion that when sites were moved to a faster server, ad revenue jumped. It seems that a lot of visitors don’t wait for slow websites to load. They just go away. I personally, associate slow-loading sites with sites overloaded with advertising. Surfers tend to stay more at fast loading sites. To make your website load faster: - Get a better hosting provider located in the area where your primary traffic comes from (example: USA). Don’t fall for the cheap oversold hosting that guarantees slow response time for scripts. Shelling out a few more bucks per month will be compensated by a higher revenue. - Use faster scripts - Use gzip compression - Minimize unnecessary images - Take off all advertising until your site gets established and ready to monetize heavily 2. Provide a more useful navigation. Make it really easy for your visitors to follow links to other content on your sites. - Put links to related articles / blog entries / forum threads below your content - Put links to the most recent articles / blog entries / forum threads below your content. Showing links to your most recent articles / blog entries on every page is a neat idea because you can also take advantage of topical queries as I have explained in a previous blog entry about the v7ndotcom elursrebmem seo contest. - If you have a rating system in place, put links to Top Rated content on your site - Cross reference your articles within your content. Place longer and more descriptive anchor text links, as there is research suggesting that when longer anchor text links are given more value than shorter links, relevancy increases. The authors of the paper speculate that longer links involve more editorial vote in them than shorter links which are most often parts of the site navigation. - Place navigational links below your content (not only above your content). How do search engines know website traffic details? Toolbars, ad network statistics, browser history, purchasing web logs from the biggest ISPs etc. etc. Search engines can spy on user behavior. If it weren’t true, they will not file patents and develop tools that make this spy job easier. Pages: 1 2 Next Last |
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